神圣的树林还是有利可图的商品?与马丁·布伯、黑麋鹿、教皇方济各和小林恩·怀特就环境退化问题进行宗教间对话。

IF 0.1 0 RELIGION
Michael Stoeber
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文分析了与当前环境问题相关的人类取向,并提出了积极的创造性回应,特别是与Martin Buber、Nick Black Elk、Pope Francis和Lynn White Jr.的对话,通过考虑一个具体的历史案例——17世纪至19世纪安大略省和北美东部其他地区白松森林生态系统的彻底枯竭和退化,强调了对树木的扭曲和虔诚态度。文章(i)将加拿大/美国的情况与南美洲亚马逊雨林的现状进行了比较;(ii)分析了造成这种环境破坏和社会文化压抑的核心传统扭曲的人类态度,在这种情况下,树木被完全物化、过度社区化和彻底剥削;(iii)指出了对树木的支持和个人转变态度,特别是通过犹太哲学和土著模式,以尊重、欣赏、不做作和深刻的精神方式突出了树木的内在价值以及我们与树木的潜在关系;以及(iv)将对话与当代社会经济关切和利益联系起来。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sacred Groves or Profitable Commodities? Interreligious Dialogue on Environmental Degradation with Martin Buber, Black Elk, Pope Francis, and Lynn White Jr.
This article analyzes human orientations related to current environmental issues and proposes positive creative responses, in dialogue especially with Martin Buber, Nick Black Elk, Pope Francis, and Lynn White Jr. It illustrates the problems in relation to Indigenous peoples and coloniality contexts, highlighting both distorted and reverential approaches to trees through consideration of a concrete historical case—the radical depletion and degradation of the white pine forest ecosystem of Ontario and other areas of eastern North America, from the seventeenth to the nineteenth century. The article (i) compares this Canadian/USA context with current conditions in the Amazon rainforest of South America; (ii) analyzes core traditional distorted human attitudes that contribute to such environmental destruction and sociocultural repression, in which trees are solely objectified, hypercommodified, and radically exploited; (iii) points to supportive and personally transforming attitudes toward trees—especially through Jewish-philosophical and Indigenous models—that highlight their intrinsic value and our potential relationship with them, in respectful, appreciative, nonintentional, and deeply spiritual ways; and (iv) relates the dialogue to contemporary socioeconomic concerns and interests.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: The Toronto Journal of Theology is a progressive, double-blind refereed journal of analysis and scholarship, reflecting diverse Christian traditions and exploring the full range of theological inquiry: Biblical Studies, History of Christianity, Pastoral Theology, Christian Ethics, Systematic Theology, Philosophy of Religion, and Interdisciplinary Studies. The journal provides a Canadian forum for discussing theological issues in cross-cultural perspectives, featuring pertinent articles, in-depth reviews and information on the latest publications in the field. The Toronto Journal of Theology is of critical interest to academics, clergy, and lay and professional theologians. Anyone concerned with contemporary opinion on theological issues will find the journal essential reading.
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